Treatise Thoughts Concerning Gospel Ministers
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-thoughts-concerning-gospel-ministers-001 |
| Words | 384 |
Let a man descant upon these in ever so lively a manner, let
him describe his sufferings ever so pathetically; if he stops
there, if he does not show man’s duty, as well as Christ’s
sufferings; if he does not apply all to the consciences of the
hearers; he will never lead them to life, either here or here
after, and therefore is no Gospel Minister. Not every one who deals in the promises only, without
ever showing the terrors of the law; that slides over “the
wrath of God revealed from heaven against all ungodliness
and unrighteousness,” and endeavours to heal those that
never were wounded. These promise-mongers are no Gospel
Ministers. Not every one (very nearly allied to the former) who bends
all his strength to coax sinners to Christ. Such soft, tender
expressions, as “My dear hearers, My dear lambs,” though
repeated a thousand times, do not prove a Gospel Minister. Lastly. Not every one that preaches justification by
faith; he that goes no farther than this, that does not insist
upon sanctification also, upon all the fruits of faith, upon
universal holiness, does not declare the whole counsel of God,
and consequently is not a Gospel Minister. 4. Who then is such? Who is a Gospel Minister, in the
full, scriptural sense of the word? He, and he alone, of
whatever denomination, that does declare the whole counsel
of God; that does preach the whole gospel, even justification
and sanctification, preparatory to glory. He that does not
put asunder what God has joined, but publishes alike, “Christ
dying for us, and Christ living in us.” He that constantly
applies all this to the hearts of the hearers, being willing
to spend and be spent for them; having himself the mind
which was in Christ, and steadily walking as Christ also
walked; he, and he alone, can with propriety be termed a
Gospel Minister. 5. Let it be particularly observed, if the gospel be “glad
tidings of great salvation which shall be unto all people,” then
those only are, in the full sense, Gospel Ministers who proclaim
the “great salvation;” that is, salvation from all (both inward
and outward) sin, into “all the mind that was in Christ
Jesus;” and likewise proclaim offers of this salvation to every
child of man.